Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2007: 2008 trends

Includes bibliography

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Otros Autores: NU. CEPAL. División de Comercio Internacional e Integración
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: ECLAC 2014
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/1169
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id oai-11362-1169
record_format dspace
institution Cepal
collection Cepal
language English
topic ACUERDOS ECONOMICOS
COMERCIO DE SERVICIOS
COMERCIO INTERNACIONAL
CONDICIONES ECONOMICAS
COOPERACION ECONOMICA
DESARROLLO REGIONAL
EXPORTACIONES
GLOBALIZACION
INTEGRACION ECONOMICA
LIBRE COMERCIO
POLITICA COMERCIAL
RELACIONES ECONOMICAS INTERNACIONALES
TENDENCIAS ECONOMICAS
SISTEMAS MONETARIOS
RECURSOS FINANCIEROS
ECONOMIC AGREEMENTS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ECONOMIC COOPERATION
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
ECONOMIC TRENDS
EXPORTS
FREE TRADE
GLOBALIZATION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
TRADE IN SERVICES
TRADE POLICY
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC RELATIONS
MONETARY SYSTEMS
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
spellingShingle ACUERDOS ECONOMICOS
COMERCIO DE SERVICIOS
COMERCIO INTERNACIONAL
CONDICIONES ECONOMICAS
COOPERACION ECONOMICA
DESARROLLO REGIONAL
EXPORTACIONES
GLOBALIZACION
INTEGRACION ECONOMICA
LIBRE COMERCIO
POLITICA COMERCIAL
RELACIONES ECONOMICAS INTERNACIONALES
TENDENCIAS ECONOMICAS
SISTEMAS MONETARIOS
RECURSOS FINANCIEROS
ECONOMIC AGREEMENTS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ECONOMIC COOPERATION
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
ECONOMIC TRENDS
EXPORTS
FREE TRADE
GLOBALIZATION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
TRADE IN SERVICES
TRADE POLICY
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC RELATIONS
MONETARY SYSTEMS
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2007: 2008 trends
description Includes bibliography
author2 NU. CEPAL. División de Comercio Internacional e Integración
author_facet NU. CEPAL. División de Comercio Internacional e Integración
format Texto
title Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2007: 2008 trends
title_short Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2007: 2008 trends
title_full Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2007: 2008 trends
title_fullStr Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2007: 2008 trends
title_full_unstemmed Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2007: 2008 trends
title_sort latin america and the caribbean in the world economy 2007: 2008 trends
publisher ECLAC
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/1169
_version_ 1718443080833564672
spelling oai-11362-11692020-11-25T22:58:09Z Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2007: 2008 trends NU. CEPAL. División de Comercio Internacional e Integración ACUERDOS ECONOMICOS COMERCIO DE SERVICIOS COMERCIO INTERNACIONAL CONDICIONES ECONOMICAS COOPERACION ECONOMICA DESARROLLO REGIONAL EXPORTACIONES GLOBALIZACION INTEGRACION ECONOMICA LIBRE COMERCIO POLITICA COMERCIAL RELACIONES ECONOMICAS INTERNACIONALES TENDENCIAS ECONOMICAS SISTEMAS MONETARIOS RECURSOS FINANCIEROS ECONOMIC AGREEMENTS ECONOMIC CONDITIONS ECONOMIC COOPERATION ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ECONOMIC TRENDS EXPORTS FREE TRADE GLOBALIZATION INTERNATIONAL TRADE REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT TRADE IN SERVICES TRADE POLICY INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC RELATIONS MONETARY SYSTEMS FINANCIAL RESOURCES Includes bibliography This year's edition of Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy is divided into seven chapters. Chapter I contains an analysis of recent trends in the main industrialized and emerging economies and reviews the possible impact of the financial crisis that began in the United States on the world economy and on the economic and trade performance of Latin America and the Caribbean. The effect of the crisis on the prices of commodities (especially food and oil) and the implications for growth, inflation and the region's external sector are also examined. Lastly, the chapter looks at the region's trade figures for 2007 and projections for 2008. Chapter II describes recent developments in the Doha Round, including documents disseminated in July 2008 on negotiations relating to agriculture and non-agricultural market access. It also provides a summary of the main advances and obstacles emerging from those negotiations, with emphasis on the repercussions for Latin America and the Caribbean. Chapter III discusses some new trade-related topics: (i) new security requirements for freight transport; (ii) the development and legal status of private quality standards; (iii) the state of play in discussions on trade and labour rules; and (iv) the debate on the links between climate change, trade and the multilateral trading system. It is argued that these and other issues will be on the international agenda for the next few years and that the region must begin to form unified positions on such topics. Chapter IV examines recent progress in regional integration and the main initiatives under way in the region's integration schemes (the Southern Common Market (MERCOSUR), the Andean Community, the Central American Common Market (CACM) and the Caribbean Community (CARICOM)). The chapter also analyses: (i) Mexico's active policy aimed at strengthening its trade and infrastructure links with Central America; (ii) the Latin American Pacific Basin Initiative; (iii) the South American Community of Nations (UNASUR); and (iv) the hosting by Brazil in December 2008 of a Summit of Heads of State and Government of Latin America and the Caribbean on the subject of regional integration schemes. The chapter concludes with an analysis of the links between investment and services as an instrument of de facto integration. Chapter V reports on the status of negotiations for the adoption of an association agreement between the European Union and each of the above-mentioned subregional integration schemes. In each case, there is a description of the negotiation process, controversial issues and the main challenges. It is noted that, since there is a similar framework for all these negotiations (covering Caribbean and Central American countries, the Andean Community, MERCOSUR, Mexico and Chile), they may generate important synergies for the subsequent convergence of trade and investment rules among the region's integration schemes. Chapter VI presents an in-depth analysis of trade and investment relations between the Latin American and Caribbean region and the Asia-Pacific region, as well as within the latter. It is established that: (i) biregional trade remains inter-industrial in nature, despite the emergence of some new export commodities and high-technology manufactures; (ii) so far, efforts to forge closer links between the Latin America and Caribbean and the Asia-Pacific regions have been undertaken by individual countries on a somewhat sporadic basis; and (iii) there needs to be a more coordinated strategy among countries, so as to strengthen the nexus between trade and investment and to reinforce production and trade linkages through various types of public-private alliances (including free trade agreements).The subject of chapter VII is the foresight analyses carried out by some countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) with a view to strengthening innovation, competitiveness and export diversification. Despite the importance of such exercises for building consensus around strategic development guidelines, they are not frequently used in Latin America and the Caribbean. Advances achieved in other parts of the world could therefore encourage the countries of the region to use such exercises as an effective tool for promoting competitiveness, innovation and export development. 2014-01-02T14:44:16Z 2014-01-02T14:44:16Z 2008-12 Texto Documento Completo 9789211216769 http://hdl.handle.net/11362/1169 LC/G.2383-P en Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy application/pdf AMERICA LATINA Y EL CARIBE ASIA Y EL PACIFICO LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN ASIA AND THE PACIFIC ECLAC